Lord Triesman: The General Affairs and External Relations Council (GAERC) will be held on 30 January in Brussels. My right honourable friends the Foreign Secretary (Jack Straw) and the Minister for Europe (Douglas Alexander) will represent the UK.
	The agenda items are as follows:
	General Affairs
	Annual Operational Programme of the Council for 2006/Annual Work Programme of the Commission: Austrian Foreign Minister, Ursula Plassnik, will give a short presentation on the Annual Operational Programme of the Council 2006. The document forms the final part of the 2004–06 multi-annual strategic programme. There is clear continuity with the Luxembourg/UK programme for 2005 and the Government are supportive of it.
	President of the European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso will also present the Commission's Legislative and Work Programme 2006 (CLWP), published in October 2005. The CLWP follows from the Commission's Strategic Objectives 2005–09 and focuses on the implementation of the Lisbon Strategy—placing jobs, growth and better regulation at the centre of its programme. The Government support these aims.
	Lisbon Strategy: Commission Annual Progress Report: The Commission will formally present its first Lisbon Annual Progress Report, assessing member states' national reform programmes against "jobs and growth" objectives and highlighting priorities for further action. The Government will want to give clear support to the continued focus on jobs and growth.
	External Relations
	World Trade Organisation/Doha Development Agenda (WTO/DDA): EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson will brief the Council on progress in the WTO round. This follows an informal EU Trade Ministers dinner on 29 January and meetings of key WTO Ministers in the margins of the World Economic Forum in Davos (25–29 January). We expect a short discussion without Conclusions.
	Relations with the Western Balkans: Commissioner for Enlargement Olli Rehn will present the Western Balkans Communication, which will form the basis of discussion at the Salzburg EU-Western Balkans Ministerial. The Council will also discuss Kosovo, in light of President Rugova's death on 21 January. The Council is expected to agree Conclusions on Bosnia, welcoming constitutional reform and Lord Ashdown's successor, and Montenegro, expressing support for Solana's personal representative, Ambassador Lajcak, as well as a statement on President Rugova's death. Conclusions are also expected to underline the continuing importance of full co-operation with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) by both Serbia and Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Government welcome the EU-Western Balkans ministerial as a chance to re-endorse the Thessaloniki messages of 2003 and focus on some hearts and minds initiatives to support the political process.
	Latin America: Presentation of Commission Communication: Commissioner for External Relations Benita Ferrero-Waldner will present the Commission communication: A stronger Partnership between the EU and Latin America. The Council is expected to agree Conclusions on this at the February GAERC. The communication sets out a strategy for strengthening the relationship between the EU and Latin America, in terms that the Government broadly welcome.
	Afghanistan: The Council is expected to have a short discussion about the London Conference on Afghanistan on 31 January-1 February. This provides an opportunity for Afghanistan to seek, and to receive, international support and endorsement for the next five years. The Afghanistan Compact represents an excellent framework for activity going forward. The Council is expected to agree Conclusions confirming the EU's long term support for the government and people of Afghanistan, welcoming the London Conference on Afghanistan and in particular the launch of the Afghanistan Compact. We also expect the Council to endorse Recommendations for enhancing EU engagement with Afghanistan and the presidency's statement to be given at the London Conference.
	Belarus: The Council will discuss the deterioration in human rights and democracy and the forthcoming presidential elections in Belarus. The Government remain concerned about the legitimacy of the 2004 referendum allowing the current president to stand for more than two terms and strongly supported November's GAERC Conclusions calling for free and fair elections. We welcome the invitation extended to OSCEIODIHR to monitor the election process and are keen that it should be able to function effectively throughout the election period. The Council is expected to agree Conclusions calling on Belarus to improve its record on human rights and democracy and expressing the EU's willingness to engage when the situation improves.
	Middle East Peace Process (MEPP): We expect Council discussion to focus on the outcome of the 25 January Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) elections, the changing political landscape in Israel in the run-up to the 28 March elections and the implications for the MEPP. The Council is expected to agree Conclusions, which take into account the political situation in the Palestinian Authority and Israel.
	Iran: The Council is expected to have a full discussion of handling of the forthcoming 2–3 February emergency International Atomic Energy Agency Board meeting, following Iran's decision to restart enrichment related activities, and likely next steps on the nuclear issue. The Council is expected to agree Conclusions.
	Iraq: We expect that discussion will centre on the recent Iraqi election results and future EU-Iraq engagement. The Government will wish to stress the importance of EU JUSTLEX, support for the Constitutional Review, maintaining a political dialogue under the EU-Iraq Joint Political Declaration and progress towards the launch of negotiations on a Trade and Co-operation Agreement. The Council is expected to agree Conclusions.
	Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM): The presidency will seek agreement on the participation of senior representatives of Burma/Myanmar at upcoming ASEM meetings held in the EU. The Government support the ASEM process as a means of engaging with Asian states on a range of issues that matter to us. The Government will want to ensure that any agreement provides for a full and substantive discussion of the human rights situation in Burma/Myanmar at ASEM ministerial meetings.

Lord Hunt of Kings Heath: My honourable friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (James Plaskitt) has made the following Statement.
	The Employment and Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs Informal Council was held on 19–21 January in Villach, Austria.
	My honourable friend the Minister for Employment Relations and Consumer Affairs (Gerry Sutcliffe) and I attended the working session for the UK.
	The Austrian presidency posed two topics for discussion on Friday 20 January. The morning session discussed "Flexicurity—flexibility through Security". The afternoon session discussed "The Social dimension of the revised Lisbon strategy and the streamlining of social policy processes".
	My honourable friend represented the UK during the morning discussion of "Flexicurity". This session explored new ways of balancing flexibility and social and employment security in Europe.
	Member States took examples from their national reform programmes to illustrate the balance they had struck between flexibility and security. For the UK, my honourable friend suggested that legislative measures were for the national level and the EU could add value by sharing experience and good practice and by promoting better regulation principles.
	The Commissioner noted that "flexicurity" would be addressed in the Commission green paper on labour law, due in the first half of the year.
	Overall, Ministers agreed that there is no one size fits all model for flexicurity, but disagreed whether legislative action should be taken at the EU level.
	The afternoon session asked Ministers to focus on the presidency question about the social dimension of the strategy for growth and jobs and the desired role and outputs for streamlined open method of co-ordination of social policies.
	For the UK, I called for practical discussion about real policies rather than theoretical debate of principles. I suggested that the aim should be to integrate social policy making within an overall reform strategy where it could contribute to the delivery of employment aims.
	There was a consensus that a visible social dimension to the Lisbon strategy must be maintained and that streamlining open method of co-ordination would help.
	The presidency then proposed that Employment Ministers should feed these messages into the spring European Council.

Lord Drayson: My honourable friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Defence (Don Touhig) has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
	In my Statement on 12 December, following my appearance at the Public Administration Select Committee oral evidence session on the operation of the FEPOW Scheme, I told the House that I had commissioned a review into the extent to which inconsistent eligibility criteria had been used for deciding claims before and after the introduction of the birth-link criterion; this work is well-advanced. In addition, I said that a separate, independent investigation would be conducted into how the use of inconsistent criteria had arisen and why it had not been exposed earlier. I said that this work would be undertaken by a retired senior official from outside of the departments involved. I am pleased to announce that Mr David Watkins, a retired senior civil servant formerly in the Northern Ireland Office who is well qualified for the task, has agreed to undertake the investigation. His role will be to consider:
	how the original inconsistencies arose, identifying any specific shortcomings in the development and implementation of policy;
	how, subsequently, the departments involved failed to identify that there had been inconsistencies, despite the need to explain the Government's position in Parliament, in the courts and to the Parliamentary Ombudsman; and
	whether there are any lessons to be learnt for the future from such shortcomings as are identified in the development of the scheme and in its administration.
	Mr Watkins has begun his investigation and I have indicated my concern that, while it must be thorough, it should be completed as quickly as practicable.
	I will make a further statement to Parliament when I have received Mr Watkins' final report.

Lord Davies of Oldham: My right honourable friend the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport (Tessa Jowell) has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
	The master plan for the Olympic Park was largely developed in the second half of 2003 by the EDAW consortium and outline planning permissions were secured in autumn 2004. The candidate file submitted to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in November 2004 and subsequently presented to the Evaluation Commission in February 2005 presented the concept of a compact Games with the Olympic Park at its heart.
	Since winning the right to stage the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games on 6 July 2005, the master plan has been reviewed, as part of the normal development process for a major project. This review has resulted in changes that will deliver a more compact Olympic Park, while meeting the technical specifications of the IOC. In summary, the revised master plan will:
	free up some land that previously had been required for the Olympic Park;
	avoid the relocation of about 100 businesses, more than 70 homes and a place of worship, and safeguard more than 1200 jobs;
	reduce overall programme and delivery risk;
	enhance operational security, needed after the terrorist attacks on 7 July 2005; and
	be delivered with a potential cost reduction over current estimates of between £250 million and £350 million.
	A detailed review has been undertaken of the Olympic village and the core Olympic and Paralympic requirements to improve deliverability, efficiency of design, utilisation, reduce risk and costs and smooth the way for best legacy use.
	The revised plan therefore proposes realigning the village to locate approximately 80 per cent of it on the Stratford Rail lands immediately to the north of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link (CTRL).
	The proposed building envelope and mix of uses complies with Stratford City's existing planning permissions and will provide a village of a similar high standard to that proposed in the original master plan.
	This move will enable an earlier start on the village, allowing building work on almost half of it to begin before power lines have been placed underground.
	The revised plan is intended to offer improved security through:
	the relocation of the IBC and MPC within the Olympic Park security cordon, bringing those facilities closer to the centre of the Olympic Park and away from major roads and unsecured car parks;
	integrated security measures for Stratford City and the Olympic Games should enable the concurrent construction of the projects to progress more efficiently; and
	a more compact athletes village should improve the efficiency of the security operation.
	Further work on refining and developing the security aspects of the revised plan is in hand.
	Details of the revisions to the master plan are set out in maps to be placed in the Library of the House.
	The overall cost reductions for land, remediation, relocation and demolition are £152 million of which £142 million relates to the LDA and £10 million for demolition relates to the ODA as analysed below:
	
		
			   £ million 
			 Land assembly, relocation and remediation 
			  
			 LDA Fish Island/car parking 
			 (Relocation of majority of 53 businesses, 72 homes avoided and 621 jobs safeguarded) 66 
			 LDA IBC/MPC relocation 
			 (Relocation of 42 businesses and 642 jobs expected to be safeguarded) 76 
			 Demolition 
			 ODA Fish Island/car parking 4 
			 ODA IBC/MPC relocation 6 
			   152 
		
	
	In addition, reductions in other ODA costs of between £100 million and £200 million, compared to the current estimated cost for the original master plan, are estimated to be achieved. These savings will mainly be achieved through:
	reduced costs for the construction of the IBC/MPC; and
	the relocation of car parking from Fish Island, with 2,000 vehicle spaces being provided in Stratford City multi-storey parking and a smaller temporary multi-storey car park on the Pudding Mill site replacing the need for a large multi-storey car park at Fish Island.
	The actual savings will be dependent on the outcome of the commercial deal to be negotiated with Stratford City and further value engineering that will be undertaken as part of the detailed design work.